Swine flu

DSB65

Well-Known Member
My nephew spent all day at my house caughing sneezing every were went to doc later that day has swine flu i think we are fucked i dont blame him fuck
 

aqueous

Well-Known Member
I had it and it wasnt that bad. just had a fever of like 100 or less, a runny nose, and sore throat from the runny nose for about 6 days. Its overhyped
 

DSB65

Well-Known Member
I hope it will be alright i know my nephew was sick as fuck i hope he is all right
 
I had it and it wasnt that bad. just had a fever of like 100 or less, a runny nose, and sore throat from the runny nose for about 6 days. Its overhyped
It is overhyped quite a bit. But it can go bad, very very bad. So don't overdue it and get a lot of rest. Be careful and good luck.
 

Iron Lion Zion

Well-Known Member
Swine Flu is no more serious than the seasonal Flu that goes around every year (obviously unless you are young/old/have a week immune system it could get out o control)... just another way for Pharmaceuticals to make some $$.
 

morgentaler

Well-Known Member
It's the potential of H1N1 that makes it dangerous.
Because of the way viruses mutate, your seasonal flu may be slightly different than the one the year before. But with the similarities in structure potentially only 1 in 4 or 5 people are going to be infected by the seasonal flu. (that's infected, not show symptoms)

But with H1N1, that virus hasn't been seen by our bodies and there's no herd immunity, so when it moves through a population, it's practically a 1:1 infection rate. But it's not a "strong" virus at the moment, so most people may not even know they had it, and only a rare few with get quite ill from it.

But with its ability to spread much more effectively through a population than the seasonal flu, if there is a mutation that makes it stronger, or amplify faster, then the potential outcome can be significantly worse.

It's not something to panic over, but it is something to be aware of. The media is really shitty at presenting any useful information and just ends up splitting people on both sides of the issue.

Basically if you have family members that are immunologically compromised, or too young to receive vaccines you should probably get the shot for H1N1, whether you are for or against vaccines. That way you won't be bringing it home to them.

The shot does not contain the virus itself, but rather the protein shell that coats the virus. This is enough for the immune system to recognize and respond to it.

What do flu vaccine shots costs in the US anyway? Here they're free.
I never used to get them because I hadn't had the flu in 25 years, but now I get them just so I don't pass it along.
 

Juan Abongheet

Well-Known Member
It's the potential of H1N1 that makes it dangerous.
Because of the way viruses mutate, your seasonal flu may be slightly different than the one the year before. But with the similarities in structure potentially only 1 in 4 or 5 people are going to be infected by the seasonal flu. (that's infected, not show symptoms)

But with H1N1, that virus hasn't been seen by our bodies and there's no herd immunity, so when it moves through a population, it's practically a 1:1 infection rate. But it's not a "strong" virus at the moment, so most people may not even know they had it, and only a rare few with get quite ill from it.

But with its ability to spread much more effectively through a population than the seasonal flu, if there is a mutation that makes it stronger, or amplify faster, then the potential outcome can be significantly worse.

It's not something to panic over, but it is something to be aware of. The media is really shitty at presenting any useful information and just ends up splitting people on both sides of the issue.

Basically if you have family members that are immunologically compromised, or too young to receive vaccines you should probably get the shot for H1N1, whether you are for or against vaccines. That way you won't be bringing it home to them.

The shot does not contain the virus itself, but rather the protein shell that coats the virus. This is enough for the immune system to recognize and respond to it.

What do flu vaccine shots costs in the US anyway? Here they're free.
I never used to get them because I hadn't had the flu in 25 years, but now I get them just so I don't pass it along.

Actually "attenuated vaccine" means that they essentially take the virus and weaker so the body can create antibodies to fight it, all while preserving the live culture in a concoction of horrible chemicals.
dont believe me? Try this site:
http://www.naturalnews.com/027055_swine_flu_vaccines_swine_flu_vaccine.html
 

ANC

Well-Known Member
Yeah please go get the vacine if you want to become a retard or die form the squalene and other dangerous substances in the untested vaccines... remember you will have no recourse to the government or pharmaceutical company once things go horribly wrong. The last time they tried a programe like this, it had to be stopped as the vacine was killing more people than the disease.

People swine flu is not such a bad thing... in fact getting a mild case is probably good for your imune system.

The last time I checked, the statistical ratio of deaths to reported cases (oh the who are no longer recording cases, so the ratio is probably even more dilute) is zero point something percent.
 

morgentaler

Well-Known Member
Smallpox.
Polio.

or Vaccines.

Yup. Vaccines are poison. Feel free to link to a peer reviewed public study of vaccine toxicity. Love to see it.
 

morgentaler

Well-Known Member
From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_A/H1N1_vaccine
There have been rumors, largely spread through internet sources, that the 2009 H1N1 vaccine contains adjuvants such as squalene that have been linked to neurological and other disorders including Gulf War Syndrome. This claim has been demonstrated to be untrue[27]. Clinical studies found no correlation between the presence of squalene antibodies and symptoms of Gulf War Syndrome[28], and adjuvants containing squalene do not induce an immune response to squalene[29].

http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/?p=851
 
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